2000 State of Origin series
| 2000 State of Origin series | |
|---|---|
| Won by | |
| Series margin | 3-0 |
| Points scored | 146 |
| Attendance | 159,074 (ave. 53,025 per match) |
| Top points scorer(s) | |
| Top try scorer(s) | |
The 2000 State of Origin series was the 19th year that the annual best-of-three series of interstate rugby league football matches contested between the Queensland and New South Wales representative teams was played under 'State of Origin' selection rules. During the 2000 series Gorden Tallis was sent off for calling the referee a cheat, Ryan Girdler amassed an incredible 32 points in one match and New South Wales whitewashed the series in a combined scoreline of 104 to 42 - the biggest gap between the two sides in history.
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[edit] Game I
| 10 May 2000 | 20–16 | Stadium Australia, Sydney Attendance: 61,511 Referee/s: Bill Harrigan Man of the Match: Adam MacDougall |
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| Ryan Girdler (8 - 2g,1t) Adam MacDougall (8 - 2t) David Peachey (4 - 1t) |
(Report) | (8 - 2t) Adrian Lam (6 - 1t,1g) Mat Rogers (2 - 1g) Darren Lockyer |
In a controversial affair, Queensland captain Gorden Tallis was sent from the field for abusing the referee,[1] in fact calling him a cheat. After Ryan Girdler had scored a try to level at 16-all which appeared to have included two knock-ons in the lead up, a furious Tallis confronted Harrigan and was immediately dismissed after calling him "a fucking cheat". Six minutes later the Blues took advantage of the extra man for David Peachey to cross out wide and secure a 20-16 win.
Immediately after the game Tallis was summonsed to a judiciary hearing at the ground but was not suspended. He had been to the referee's room beforehand and apologised to Harrigan. Blues prop Robbie Kearns later claimed in the Melbourne Herald Sun newspaper that Tallis was to blame for Queensland's loss by showing poor discipline and that he had let himself and his side down.
[edit] Game II
| 5 June 2000 | 10–28 | Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane Attendance: 38,796 Referee/s: Bill Harrigan Man of the Match: Tim Brasher |
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| Mat Rogers (6 - 3g) Gorden Tallis (4 - 1t) |
(Report) | (12 - 1t, 4g) Ryan Girdler (4 - 1t) Brad Fittler (4 - 1t) Shaun Timmins (4 - 1t) Scott Hill (4 - 1t) David Furner |
New South Wales' win in the second game secured their first series win since 1997 and the 28-10 scoreline would be their biggest ever winning margin until game III two weeks later.
[edit] Game III
| 26 June 2000 | 56–16 | Stadium Australia, Sydney Attendance: 58,767 Referee/s: Bill Harrigan Man of the Match: Ryan Girdler |
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| Ryan Girdler (32 - 10g, 3t) Matthew Gidley (8 - 2t) Adam Muir (4 - 1t) Andrew Johns (4 - 1t) Bryan Fletcher (4 - 1t) Adam MacDougall (4 - 1t) |
(Report) | (8 - 1t,2g) Mat Rogers (4 - 1t) Darren Smith (4 - 1t) Gorden Tallis |
New South Wales centre Ryan Girdler produced the performance of his life and the Blues were hailed as the greatest side in Origin history after they demolished Queensland and completed their third clean sweep. Girdler scored three tries and kicked 10 goals from 10 ten attempts for a record 32-point haul during which New South Wales crossed the Queensland line nine times. New South Wales had led 20-10 at half-time but a try to Andrew Johns after the break saw the floodgates open with six Origin records beaten or matched:
* Biggest winning margin in State of Origin history
* Most points in an Origin match
* Most points by an individual in an Origin match
* Most points by an individual in an Origin series (Girdler, 52)
* Most goals by an individual in an Origin match
* Most tries by an individual in an Origin match (Girdler's three equalled Chris Anderson's in 1983 and Kerry Boustead's in 1984)
[edit] Teams
[edit] New South Wales
| Position | Game 1 | Game 2 | Game 3 | |||
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[edit] Queensland
| Position | Game 1 | Game 2 | Game 3 | |||
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[edit] See also
[edit] Sources
- ^ "State of Origin - 2000s". The Sydney Morning Herald (Australia: Fairfax Digital). 2010-04-27. http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/league-news/state-of-origin--2000s-20100426-tndh.html. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- Big League's 25 Years of Origin Collectors' Edition, News Magazines, Surry Hills, Sydney
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